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Enlarge ImageRequest to buy this photoDISPATCH FILE PHOTOColumbus Firefighter Marc Cain, shown here in 2005, is accused of having sex with a young woman while on duty. Fire officials also have investigated whether his superiors withheld facts.

An investigation of a Columbus firefighter has widened in an effort to determine whether
supervisors tried to cover up his two-year sexual affair with a young woman while on duty.

Fire Division investigators have spent the past five months uncovering details during more than
85 interviews to determine how firefighter Marc Cain was able to violate division policy by having
sex with the woman while on duty.

The interview transcripts, obtained by
The Dispatch through a public-records request, detail that Cain repeatedly lied to
colleagues and supervisors and knowingly broke rules, and that his supervisors did not keep records
of the woman’s frequent visits to fire Station 17 on the West Side where he worked.

The Dispatch is not naming the woman because she is not under investigation.

The inquiry was stuck in neutral in the summer because firefighters told investigators they had
no knowledge of an affair or weren’t forthcoming with information. That changed after a series of
events.

The first was that Cain’s wife went to the station early in the summer and began questioning a
firefighter about the woman. That firefighter said the Cains were accusing him of having the
affair. There is no evidence to support that accusation.

A few weeks later, in June, the 20-year-old woman, who was 18 when the affair with Cain started,
attempted suicide. She recovered after 14 days at Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center,
her attorney said.

After she recovered, the woman supplied the Fire Division with a picture of Cain’s penis, which
Cain had texted to her. Cain, 48, has since admitted to investigators that he sent the picture
while on duty. Cain said it was likely he had oral sex, but not intercourse, with the woman while
on duty, but never in the fire station.

Two firefighters told investigators last month that Cain told them he had intercourse in the
station.

“I’m a hard-working guy, and there are a lot of other guys at 17s (the fire station) that are
good, hard workers, too, and they want to be there and they want this stuff to end because … it’s
crushing people,” one firefighter told investigators.

Cain has been assigned to another station but remains on active duty.

Meanwhile, allegations of a cover-up have touched the highest ranks of the division.

Assistant Fire Chief David K. Whiting removed himself in July from overseeing the investigation
after accusations that he had compromised it by talking to Cain and other firefighters at Station
17.

Whiting told investigators that he broke protocol and spoke to Cain during the investigation
because, after the woman’s attempted suicide, her father threatened Cain’s life.

Whiting told
The Dispatch that he felt it necessary to reach out to Cain because he’d never before heard
such a threat made against a firefighter. Whiting said he also told Cain’s supervisors about the
threat.

Whiting said it was something he had never done as head of discipline for the division and that
he never talked to Cain from the time the investigation was launched in April until the threat was
made.

“He did ask me what he should do, and I said, ‘Come to work,’ ” Whiting said.

Firefighters said Cain contacted them during the investigation, trying to find out details of
their interviews. In one instance, Cain warned a battalion chief that he was going to be questioned
before investigators had notified the chief.

Concerned about collusion and Cain’s actions, Fire Chief Gregory A. Paxton expanded the
investigation. Paxton assigned Battalion Chief David Witosky to take over the investigation.

Last month, Lt. Christopher Kirchner, Cain’s direct supervisor, told Witosky that he was aware
of the sexual affair when he was first questioned in June but did not say so. When asked why,
Kirchner said he wasn’t asked about it by Lt. Lawrence Stevens in his initial interview.

A transcript of that interview shows that Stevens, asking about Cain and the woman, asked
Kirchner to describe their relationship. Kirchner replied that it was “seemingly just a
friendship."

Kirchner also testified that he saw the woman in Cain’s room, a violation of policy, and told
Cain to keep her out. Kirchner said he then saw the woman in the bedroom hallway and warned Cain
again.

Firefighters said they routinely saw Cain’s mistress at the station, especially during the
summer when she was home from college. They told investigators that, until this past spring, they
were fooled by Cain’s story that the young woman was a troubled teen from a broken home and that
her parents were alcoholics.

Cain brought the woman to family events at the fire station, such as Christmas parties and
bring-your-child-to-work day, firefighters said.

“We were all under the pretense that he was trying to help her out. She was like a daughter. She
was a nursing student. She was trying to get her feet wet in the EMS field,” Lt. William Willison
told investigators. “The guys at 17s are extremely upset and hurt by what happened. Nobody knew
what was going on at firefighter or lieutenant level.”

The woman’s attorney said Cain’s story is fiction.

“Her mother and father have been married for close to 29 years and never had any separations,
and they are a loving family,” said Kevin Kerns, the attorney. “Because of the outrageousness of
the comment, in some ways it was laughable.”

The division cannot account for how many times the woman was at the station or rode on fire
vehicles with Cain on emergency runs. Supervisors said that either she didn’t sign waiver forms for
ride-alongs or they were destroyed. Supervisors told investigators that division policy didn’t
require them to keep waiver forms.

A firefighter told investigators that he heard banging noises coming from Cain’s room at the
station on a night Cain was supposed to be off-duty. Cain told investigators he spent the night
there because he went to a movie nearby with the woman and other off-duty firefighters and was too
drunk to drive home.

The woman told investigators she had sex with Cain that night in the station.

Cain says the woman seduced him by comforting him when he talked about problems he had with his
wife, friends or co-workers.

“Everything she did, she manipulated to make me feel like I’m the king of the world,” he told
investigators.

Attorney Kerns said Cain preyed upon the young woman.

“When I heard the facts of this case, I was absolutely disgusted,” Kerns said. “And the actions
of Firefighter Cain are a disgrace because I know throughout this country, firefighters do a great
job, and they are great people, and they work hard and do the right thing.”

The investigation was completed last week, and the division is expected to discipline a number
of firefighters, though it will likely be several weeks before any punishments are levied, fire
officials said.

Fire Chief Paxton said he cannot comment until he reviews the investigation.